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Lawnmower Blenny (Salarias fasciatus)

Lawnmower Blenny

Salarias fasciatus
Family
Blenny
Care level
Beginner
Temperament
Peaceful
Reef safe
Reef safe
Max size
14 cm
Min tank
150 L · 40 gal
Origin
Indo-Pacific
Diet
Herbivore
Food
Nori, Algae wafers, Spirulina, Herbivore pellets

Overview

The Lawnmower Blenny is one of the most popular algae-eating fish in the marine hobby, prized for its ability to graze film algae and hair algae off rock and glass. It has a mottled brown-green body with darker banding and a comical, wide-eyed face that gives it a lot of personality for a relatively small fish.

It's hardy, easy to care for, and does best in a tank with an established algae film already present when it arrives, since this is its primary food source. In algae-poor or newer tanks it needs consistent supplemental feeding to avoid starving.

Its usefulness as a natural algae grazer combined with its easygoing temperament makes it a reliable choice for a very wide range of reef and fish-only setups.

Compatibility

Lawnmower Blennies are peaceful toward other fish and fully reef safe, leaving corals, clams, and invertebrates alone. They can occasionally show mild territorial behaviour toward other blennies of similar shape and colour, particularly in smaller tanks, but rarely cause serious problems.

They mix well with community fish, gobies, clownfish, and most reef inhabitants without issue.

Health & quarantine

This is a hardy, adaptable species with few chronic health problems, though its main risk is starvation in tanks without enough natural algae growth — a visibly pinched belly is the key warning sign to watch for. Quarantine for two to four weeks is good general practice, and like most blennies it lacks scales so should not be treated with copper-based medications. It's also a capable jumper, so a secure lid is worthwhile.

Frequently asked questions

Will a Lawnmower Blenny keep my tank algae-free?
It helps significantly with film and hair algae on rock and glass, but it's not a substitute for proper nutrient control — think of it as a helpful grazer, not a total solution.
What happens if my tank runs out of algae?
The blenny can starve if there isn't enough natural grazing available, so supplement with nori, algae wafers, or spirulina foods, especially in newer or very clean tanks.
Is the Lawnmower Blenny reef safe?
Yes, fully reef safe with corals, clams and other invertebrates.
Can I keep two Lawnmower Blennies together?
Possible in a larger tank with plenty of rock and food, but two in a small tank can lead to territorial squabbles.
Do Lawnmower Blennies jump out of tanks?
They can, so a tight-fitting lid or covered overflow is recommended.

Care guidance is drawn from our own experience — every fish is an individual, so treat it as a starting point, not a guarantee. Not sure if a species suits your tank? Come ask us in store. New to the terms? Read the care-terms glossary.